![](https://static.isu.pub/fe/default-story-images/news.jpg?width=720&quality=85%2C50)
3 minute read
Appendix: Bibliography
APPENDIX
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Nationwide studies and reviews of environmental disparities in the United States:
Anderton, D. L., A. B. Anderson, et al. (1994). “Hazardous Waste Facilities: “Environmental Equity” Issues in Metropolitan Areas.” Evaluation Review 18(2): 123-140.
Anderton, D. L., A. B. Anderson, et al. (1994). “Environmental Equity: The Demographics of Dumping.” Demography 31(2): 229-248.
Lester, J. P., D. W. Allen, et al. Environmental Justice in the United States: Myths and Realities. Boulder, CO, Westview Press, 2001.
Ringquist, E. J. (2005). “Assessing evidence of environmental inequities: A meta-analysis.” Journal of Policy Analysis and Management 24(2): 223-247.
Mohai, P. and R. Saha. (2006). “Reassessing Racial and Socioeconomic Disparities in Environmental Justice Research.” Demography 43(2): 383-399.
California studies documenting that minority communities bear a disproportionate share of the total burden of pollution exposure and attendant health risks:
Pulido, L., S. Sidawi, et al. (1996). “An Archeology of Environmental Racism in Los Angeles.” Urban Geography 17(5): 419-439.
Boer, T. J., M. Pastor, et al. (1997). “Is there environmental racism? The demographics of hazardous waste in Los Angeles County.” Social Science Quarterly 78(4): 793-810.
Morello-Frosch, R., M. Pastor, Jr., et al. (2002). “Environmental justice and regional inequality in Southern California: implications for future research.” Environmental Health Perspectives 110 Suppl 2: 149-154.
Sadd, J., M. Pastor, et al. (1999). “‘Every Breath You Take...’: The Demographics of Toxic Air Releases in Southern California.” Economic Development Quarterly 13(2): 107-123.
Pastor, M., J. Sadd, et al. (2004). “Waiting to Inhale: The Demographics of Toxic Air Release Facilities in 21st-Century California.” Social Science Quarterly 85(2): 420-440.
Pastor, M., J. Sadd, et al. (2005). “The Air is Always Cleaner on the Other Side: Race, Space, and Air Toxics Exposures in California.” Journal of Urban Affairs 27(2): 127-148.
Morello-Frosch, R., T. Woodruff, et al. (2000). “Air Toxics and Health Risks in California: The Public Health Implications of Outdoor Concentrations.” Risk Analysis 20(2): 273-291.
Morello-Frosch R., M. Pastor, C. Porras, J. Sadd. (2002). “Environmental Justice and Regional Inequality in Southern California: Implications for Future Research.” Environmental Health Perspectives 110((Supplement 2).): 149-154.
Brody, J., R. Morello-Frosch, et al. (Forthcoming). “Linking Exposure Assessment Science with Policy Objectives for Environmental Justice and Breast Cancer Advocacy: The Northern California Household Exposure Study.” American Journal of Public Health.
Burke, L. (1993). “Race and Environmental Equity: A Geographic Analysis in Los Angeles.” Geo-Info Systems October: 44-50.
California studies examining birth outcome effects from air pollution exposures:
Ritz, B., M. Wilhelm, et al. (2007). “Ambient air pollution and preterm birth in the environment and pregnancy outcomes study at the University of California, Los Angeles.” American Journal of Epidemiology 166(9): 1045-1052.
Ritz, B., F. Yu, et al. (2000). “Effect of air pollution on preterm birth among children born in Southern California between 1989 and 1993.” Epidemiology 11(5): 502-511.
Ritz, B. and F. Yu (1999). “The effect of ambient carbon monoxide on low birth weight among children born in Southern California between 1989 and 1993.” Environmental Health Perspectives 107(1): 17-25.
Ritz, B. and M. Wilhelm (2008). “Ambient air pollution and adverse birth outcomes: methodologic issues in an emerging field.” Basic and Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology 102(2): 182-190.
Parker, J. and T. Woodruff (2008). “Influences of study design and location on the relationship between particulate matter air pollution and birthweight.” Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology 22: 214–227.
Parker, J., T. Woodruff, et al. (2005). “Air pollution and birth weight among term infants in California.” Pediatrics 115(1): 121-128.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The Los Angeles Collaborative for Environmental Health and Justice thanks the following individuals for their assistance in preparing this report:
Manal J. Aboelata, MPH, Prevention Institute
Dr. Rajiv Bhatia, MD, City of San Francisco’s Program on Health, Equity and Sustainability
Marianne P. Brown, MPH, past Director of the Labor Occupational Safety and Health program and retired Faculty of the Center for Occupational & Environmental Health, UCLA School of Public Health
Barbara Maynard, Maynard Consulting Services
Gideon Kracov, Attorney at Law
Barbara Osborn, Liberty Hill Foundation
Manuel Pastor, Ph.D., Program for Environmental and Regional Equity, University of Southern California
Rachel Morello-Frosch, Ph.D., UC Berkeley School of Public Health
Dr. Paul Simon, MD, MPH, Los Angeles County, Division of Chronic Disease and Injury Prevention, Public Health Department
EDITORIAL INFORMATION
Produced and Published by: Liberty Hill Foundation
Project Management: Amy Sausser Consulting
Primary Writers: Martha Matsuoka, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Urban & Environmental Policy Institute, Occidental College Michele Prichard, Director, Common Agenda, Liberty Hill Foundation James Sadd, Ph.D., Professor, Environmental Science, Occidental College
Contributors: Marcie Hale, Amy Sausser and Elva Yanez
Photos: Peter Bennett/Green Stock Photos, Jesse Marquez, Rick Nahmias and Esteban Ramirez
Design: 36 Branding
Printing: Harman Press
Liberty Hill Foundation 2121 Cloverfield Boulevard, Suite 113 Santa Monica, CA 90404
phone (310) 453-3611 fax (310) 453-7806